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St. Petersburg Times, Oct. 30, 2008
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October 30, 2008: An
excerpt from a
story in the
St. Petersburg Times:
Rays miracle season over, but its effects will lastBy JOHN ROMANO
The celebration began in front of the mound and spread quickly around the infield. The regret moved more slowly, one heartache at a time, until it could be felt all the way to Tampa Bay.
The Rays lost 4-3 to the Phillies in the completion of Game 5 of the World Series on Wednesday night, ending the most remarkable season of baseball Tampa Bay will ever know.
And when it was done, a dugout of players looked despairingly toward the field as another team took ownership of their dream. For the first time since February, these Rays had nowhere left to go. They had fallen one step short of conquer.
So tell me, how are you supposed to feel today?
Do you curse the premature ending, or do you celebrate the unexpected ride?
"These guys have created baseball in Tampa Bay, I believe," Rays owner Stuart Sternberg said. "I know it's a large amount to bite off and chew, but I don't think the region's 3-million-plus people knew what baseball could mean until this year.
"And that's something that's going to stick now for generations."
There may be a day in the future when the Rays take it a step further. There may be a team from Tampa Bay that one day will be called World Series champions.
But it is hard to imagine any team having a greater impact than this.
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The Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 30, 2008
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October 30, 2008: An
excerpt from a
story in
The Philadelpia Inquirer:
Fan celebration worth the waitBy PATRICK KERKSTRA and KRISTEN GRAHAM
A final, biting Brad Lidge slider.
And then, bedlam.
A scream of triumph decades in the making burst forth from bars and living rooms across Philadelphia last night as the Phillies won their first World Series in 28 years.
Citizens Bank Park trembled beneath the feet of 46,000 ecstatic fans. Teeming masses of humanity instantly seized South Broad Street, the intersection of Frankford and Cottman, and Main Street in Manayunk. Center City was so crammed with revelers, it was a challenge even to move.
Tens of thousands of euphoric college students from Drexel, Temple and Penn spontaneously marched en masse to join the party. The few cars on the roads were overloaded with fans, who rode on roofs, trunks, even front windows.
Fans clambered up light poles, and ripped down the World Series banners atop them. They filmed the exuberant scene with camcorders and cell phones. Fireworks shot into the sweet October sky in neighborhoods across the city.
"This is the best thing that could ever happen to this city. The Phillies finally did it, and we're the happiest people on earth," Joe McClain, 23, said from the intersection of Frankford and Cottman.
In Center City, a pregnant woman named Amy Arcarso pointed at the statue of William Penn atop City Hall and bellowed: "We broke your curse."
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Daily Herald, October 29, 2008
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October 29, 2008: An
excerpt from a
story in suburban Chicago newspaper, the
Daily Herald:
Could the Great Depression happen again? On the 79th anniversary, we asked experts if it's possibleBy ANNA MARIE KUKEC
Gather top local economists together and ask them one question: Are we heading for another Great Depression? And their views are as diverse as the city and suburbs. Yes. No. Possibly. They do agree that our country is in one of its worst economic times ever. Yet as we mark today's anniversary of the start of the Great Depression in 1929, don't be too quick to compare then and now.
At least not yet.
The major difference this time is Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who studied the Great Depression and aims to learn from the past, said James Langenfeld, adjunct professor at Loyola University School of Law in Chicago and director of the Law and Economics Consulting Group. "Bernanke will not make the same mistakes as the 1930s," Langenfeld said. "But he could make new mistakes. What they are taking is a completely different path."
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Anchorage Daily News, October 28, 2008
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October 28, 2008: An
excerpt from a
story in the
Anchorage Daily News:
Stevens guilty: 'It's not over yet,' he saysBy ERIKA BOLSTAD and RICHARD MAUER
WASHINGTON -- A federal jury on Monday convicted U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens on all seven counts of lying on his financial disclosures, a crippling blow not just to his election chances next week but to his legacy as Alaska's longest serving and most accomplished living politician.
Stevens also risks jail time. The seven felonies each carry a penalty of five years in prison, though it's unlikely a significant prison sentence, if any, would be imposed on an 84-year-old, first-time offender with a long record of public service and a longer list of character references.
"It's not over yet!" Stevens said angrily to his wife as he walked from the courtroom Monday afternoon.
"You've got that right," Catherine Stevens replied as she reached for him through the crowd of supporters rushing past reporters for the door.
"Not over yet," Stevens said.
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Beaver County Times, October 27, 2008
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October 27, 2008: Excerpts from two stories in the Pennsylvania newspaper, the Beaver County Times:Barack Obama: Stay on Course, Don't Mess UpBy TOM RAUM (Associated Press Writer)
For Barack Obama, the way to cross the finish line first may be simply to stay on course and avoid game-changing mistakes. It doesn't hurt that the political landscape favors Democrats or that the Illinois senator has a huge cash advantage over rival John McCain.
Headed into the final week flush with cash, Obama has the lead in most national polls, is running ahead in states won by Democrat John Kerry in 2004 and is either leading or competitive in about a half-dozen states last won by President Bush, including delegate-rich Florida and Ohio and onetime GOP stronghold Virginia.
The financial shocks of the past several weeks, an unpopular war and a president with sub-basement approval ratings should help Obama.
"I think he has to stay on message -- and not flub -- to keep on what seems to be a positive glide path," said Princeton political scientist Fred Greenstein, who has written several books on the presidency. "And no gloating. He should not sound like a latter-day Tom Dewey."
John McCain: Fuel Doubts, Don't Give UpBy BETH FOUHY (Associated Press Writer)
To win the presidency, Republican John McCain will continue stoking doubts about Barack Obama's tax policies and readiness to be commander in chief while hoping the volatile electoral map ultimately will look more or less as it did in 2004, when President Bush was narrowly re-elected.
It's a daunting, perhaps insurmountable, challenge.
With just over a week to go in a political climate that overwhelmingly favors Democratic nominee Barack Obama, McCain has increasingly limited options to reach the 270 Electoral College votes needed for victory. His state-by-state strategy allows him almost no margin for error.
The McCain team is well aware of the challenges, including a fierce headwind from the economic crisis, Bush's historically low approval ratings, and Obama's enormous financial advantage to push his message of change. Yet advisers insist victory still is within reach, even if some Republican insiders privately harbor doubts.
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Chicago Sun-Times, October 23, 2008
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October 23, 2008: An excerpt from a story in the
Chicago Sun-Times:
Worst of all worlds?By TERRY SAVAGE
The world's stock and commodity markets are pricing in a global depression. That's the only way to understand the staggering declines not only in the major stock indexes Wednesday, but the greater percentage losses in commodities that are the raw materials of the industrial economies of the world.
The stock market declines -- the Dow was down another 514.45 Wednesday -- make headlines of a magnitude we instantly understand, watching wealth evaporate into thin air. The market's fear of the unknown in the credit crisis has been replaced by the reality of declining profits for business.
Not so obviously, the commodity markets are also predicting that all of that global growth will slow to a trickle. Oil is the most visible commodity to decline -- from its peak of $147.27 a barrel in midsummer this year to Wednesday's closing price of $66.75, a 16-month low. The downdraft accelerated after a report showing rising stockpiles of crude oil, as demand for energy products dwindled.
It's one thing that consumers have to cheer about these days. Not only will gasoline prices fall, but the threatened rise in home heating costs this winter will be blunted.
But a global slowdown is generally bad news -- for Americans, and for workers in emerging economies.
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DNA, October 22, 2008
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October 22, 2008: An excerpt from a story in the Mumbai, India newspaper,
DNA:
India's moon mission takes off
SRIHARIKOTA: PSLV-C11 carrying India's first unmanned moon spacecraft Chandrayaan-1 lifted off successfully from ISRO's Satish Dhawan Space Centre here on Wednesday.
At the end of the 49-hour countdown, the 44.4 meter tall four-stage PSLV-C11 blasted off from the second launch pad with the ignition of the core first stage.
Scientists cheered as the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle weighing 316 tonnes at the time of launch, soared majestically into partially cloudy sky at 6.22 am from the space port, 100 km north of Chennai.
This is the 14th flight of ISRO's workhorse PSLV, which had launched 29 satellites into a variety of orbits since 1993. This launch vehicle uses larger strap-on motors to achieve higher payload capability.
The Chandrayaan-1 is carrying 11 payloads, five entirely designed and developed in India, three from European Space Agency, one from Bulgaria and two from US, which would explore the Moon.
The rocket would place the spacecraft in a transfer orbit around the earth shortly.
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Dagens Nyheter, October 20, 2008
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October 20, 2008: The Stockholm, Sweden newspaper,
Dagens Nyheter, looks at the U.S. presidential election.
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Newsday, October 16, 2008
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October 16, 2008: An excerpt from a story in Newsday:
Too little, too late for McCainBy CRAIG GORDON
It took three debates, but John McCain finally found a voice Wednesday night to land some attacks on Barack Obama and pitch his own candidacy without coming off as too mean or too angry.
But McCain's problem at Hofstra University was clear -- he needed a solid performance like this to win over voters in the first debate, not the last, when Obama is showing signs of pulling away from McCain in the national polls.
In short, it just looked like too little, too late.
McCain scored points when he argued Obama would raise taxes and wage "class warfare." He accused him of breaking his word to the American people on public financing for his campaign.
He even delivered the single-best sound-bite of the debates so far, sure to be replayed over and over again on TV on Thursday and pound home a message McCain wants voters to hear: "Senator Obama, I am not President Bush."
Even those small wins were hardly enough to change the contours of a race that feels more every day like Obama's to lose -- that vaunted "game-changer" that is almost impossible to score against a cool and composed debater like Obama, who simply hasn't made a major mistake in any of the debates.
So it's doubtful that anything that McCain said or did Wednesday night was enough to shake loose many voters who've already decided to back Obama, and those recent-deciding voters are more than enough to turn a 47-year-old senator from Illinois into a history-making President Barack Obama.
(See also: Poynter's Links to the News page,
"Presidential Debate History.")
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The New York Times, October 14, 2008
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October 14, 2008: An excerpt from a story in
The New York Times:
Professor and Columnist Wins Economics Nobel
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
Paul Krugman, a professor at Princeton and an Op-Ed page columnist for The New York Times, was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science on Monday.
The prize committee cited Mr. Krugman for his "analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity."
Mr. Krugman, 55, is probably more widely known for his Op-Ed columns in which he has been a perpetual thorn in President Bush's (and now John McCain's) side. His columns have won him both strong supporters and ardent critics.
The prize, however, was awarded for the academic -- and less political -- research that he conducted primarily before he began writing regularly for The Times.
"To be absolutely, totally honest, I thought this day might come some day, but I was absolutely convinced it wasn't going to be this day," Mr. Krugman said in an interview on Monday. "I know people who live their lives waiting for this call, and it’s not good for the soul. So I put it out of my mind and stopped thinking about it."
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Il Giomale di Sardegna, October 13, 2008
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October 13, 2008: Economic news from the Cagliari, Italy newspaper, Il Giornale di Sardegna. Here is a BBC News link for recent updates about stock markets around the world.
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Asahi Shimbun, October 10, 2008
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October 10, 2008: Page One from the Tokyo, Japan newspaper, Asahi Shimbun. Here is an excerpt from a story on the
BBC News Web site:
Financial crisis: World round-upA look at the regions of the world most affected by the financial crisis, and what governments are doing to try to alleviate the financial turmoil.
ASIA-PACIFICAUSTRALIA: Australia's central bank has cut its key interest rate from 7% to 6% - a much bigger-than-expected reduction. Observers had only expected a half-point cut as inflation is currently above target.
CHINA: China has also joined the interest rate offensive, cutting rates by 0.27 percentage points.
JAPAN: Prime Minister Taro Aso said he would call an emergency summit of the G8 if finance ministers meeting in Washington did not reach agreement to take action on the credit crisis.
He has said more action would need to be taken to boost the country's flagging economy, even after the lower house approved a 1.8 trillion yen ($18bn) stimulus plan and the Bank of Japan put 4.5 trillion yen ($45.5 billion) into the banking system.
SOUTH KOREA, HONG KONG, TAIWAN: The central banks of South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan have joined the growing number of countries to cut their interest rates.
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The Tennessean, October 8, 2008
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October 8, 2008: An excerpt from a story in
The Tennessean:
Economy rules Nashville debateCandidates repeat their main themesBy BILL THEOBALD
Democrat Barack Obama promoted his plans to invest billions in federal spending to boost the failing economy during Tuesday night's presidential debate, while Republican John McCain said tax cuts and tightening federal spending are the cure to what has become the central issue in the campaign's final weeks.
The 90-minute town hall forum at Belmont University's Curb Event Center was tepid compared with the pre-debate hype that McCain would attack Obama's character and Obama would respond in kind.
Instead of going on the attack, the two repeated themes they have sounded throughout the campaign in response to questions submitted to debate organizers and those asked by a selection of 80 uncommitted Middle Tennessee voters who joined the candidates on the stage. And at times, it was Obama who was the more aggressive in his jabs at McCain.
"We are in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression," Obama said in response to the first question. "This is a final verdict on the economic policies of the last eight years."
"Americans are angry, upset and a little fearful," McCain said on a day when the Dow Jones industrial average hit its lowest level in five years.
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, October 3, 2008
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October 3, 2008: An excerpt from a story in the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
They hit their marks
By JO MANNIES
Vice presidential candidates Sarah Palin and Joe Biden spent most of their time defending or attacking the two men at the top of their tickets — John McCain and Barack Obama — in a 90-minute debate Thursday night touted as a potential game-changer.
Whether the Biden-Palin confrontation will live up to its billing as the most consequential vice presidential debate in history may not be known for days, when analysts and public opinion polls weigh in.
Immediately after the debate, aides and activists in both camps praised their candidate's performance. Observers agreed that both avoided the kind of major gaffe that can send approval ratings plummeting.
Palin, the Republican governor of Alaska, repeatedly emphasized McCain's promise to keep most of the current federal income tax breaks in place, while challenging Obama's promise to raise taxes only on people who earn more than $250,000 a year.
Palin said Obama would end up hiking taxes on far more Americans.
Biden, a veteran U.S. senator from Delaware and a Democrat, defended Obama's tax proposals while hammering at McCain's plan to tax employer-provided health insurance and give families an annual $5,000 tax credit to buy their own coverage.
Biden said McCain's health-insurance plan amounted to a tax increase on many Americans and would leave millions of them without insurance coverage. Palin disagreed.
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The Miami Herald, October 1, 2008
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October 1, 2008: An excerpt from astory in
The Miami Herald:
After 50 years, NASA is at a crossroadsFor 50 years, the sky has been the limit for America's space agency. But the view of the future now looks cloudyBy EVAN S. BENN
Nearly half a century ago, Sam Beddingfield walked into the NASA office and asked for a job, confessing he didn't know a thing about rockets.
"'It's OK," they told him. "No one does."
Wednesday marks the 50th anniversary of the agency's birth, when President Dwight Eisenhower promised the United States would lead the race to space.
The vision for the next 50 years is just as clear -- revisit the moon, send astronauts to explore Mars and beyond -- but the bottomless supply of money that fueled the agency's early success is no more.
(See also: Poynter's Links to the News page, "History of U.S. Space Flight.")_______________________________________
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Chicago Tribune, Sept. 30, 2008
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September 30, 2008: An excerpt from astory in the
Chicago Tribune:
How low will it go?Dow plunges 778, the biggest point drop ever, as bailout deal is rejectedBy GREG BURNS and MARK SILVA
Brace yourself for a wild time on Wall Street in the days ahead, after Monday's smackdown of a $700 billion bank bailout plan sent fearful investors racing for the exits.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 778, the biggest point drop ever, with financial companies leading the plunge amid partisan finger-pointing on Capitol Hill.
The rescue legislation fell 13 votes short of approval in the House, a stunning rank-and-file rebuke of the plan hammered out by congressional leaders days earlier, prompting top lawmakers and the Bush administration to push for a compromise later this week.
"What happened today cannot stand. We must move forward," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said, "and our work will not be finished until that is done."
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The Advocate, Sept. 28, 2008
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September 28, 2008: An excerpt from a story in the Stamford, Connecticut newspaper,
The Advocate:
He left his mark on all he touchedBy BRIAN LOCKHART
Paul Newman, whose cool blue eyes gazed from silver screens and supermarket shelves for decades, also will be remembered in Connecticut as a family man, philanthropist, liberal political voice and neighbor.
Newman, a 10-time Academy Award nominee, died Friday at 83, surrounded by family and close friends at his Westport farmhouse after a long battle with cancer, publicist Jeff Sanderson said Saturday.
His death came nine months after he and Joanne Woodward celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary. During those five decades, Newman portrayed iconic film characters Fast Eddie Felson, Butch Cassidy, Cool Hand Luke and Hud Bannon; won an Academy Award for acting; raised daughters Elinor ("Nell"), Melissa and Clea; raced sports cars; and greeted neighbors who regularly spotted him in pizza parlors and supermarkets.
The neighborNewman and Woodward first came to Westport when "Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys" was filmed in the town. The 1958 comedy featured the couple as a suburban husband and wife on opposite sides when the government decides it is the perfect place for a nuclear missile base.
They settled in Westport after their Jan. 29, 1958, wedding. Woodward later said that when they moved to the town - spending $96,000 in 1960 for a house and two barns - they came for the same reason that drew so many to the suburbs in that era: They wanted a quiet place to raise their children.
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Northeast Mississippi Journal
Sept. 27, 2008, Newseum Image
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September 27, 2008: An excerpt from a story in the Northeast Mississippi Journal:
The World Watches
In Oxford Debate, Candidates Spar Over War and Taxes
By BETH FOUHY (Associated Press)
OXFORD, Miss. -- John McCain accused Barack Obama of compiling "the most liberal voting record in the United States Senate" tonight in the first debate of their close campaign for the White House. The Democrat shot back, "Mostly that's just me opposing George Bush's wrong-headed policies."
Obama said his Republican rival has been a loyal supporter of the unpopular president across the past eight years, adding that the current economic crisis is "a final verdict on eight years of failed economic policies promoted by President Bush and supported by Sen. McCain."
The two men clashed over spending, taxes, energy and -- at length -- the war in Iraq during their 90-minute debate.
McCain accused his younger rival of an "incredible thing of voting to cut off funds for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan," a reference to legislation that cleared the Senate more than a year ago.
Obama disputed that, saying he had opposed funding in a bill that presented a "blank check" to the Pentagon while McCain had opposed money in legislation that included a timetable for troop withdrawal.
Obama opposed the invasion of Iraq in 2002, before he was a member of Congress, while McCain voted in the Senate to authorize the war.
"You were wrong" on Iraq, Obama repeated three times in succession. "John, you like to pretend the war began in 2007."
McCain replied that Obama has refused to acknowledge the success of the troop buildup in Iraq that McCain recommended and Bush announced more than a year ago.
The 47-year-old Obama is seeking to become the nation's first black president. McCain, 72, is hoping to become the oldest first-term chief executive in history -- and he made a few jokes at his own expense.____________________________________________
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The Washington Post, Sept. 25, 2008
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September 25, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in
The Washington Post:
Bush Calls Bailout Vital to Economy, Will Meet With McCain and ObamaBy LORI MONTGOMERY and PAUL KANE
President Bush said yesterday that the credit crisis that has seized world markets could devastate the U.S. economy unless Congress acts quickly to approve a $700 billion bailout plan for the nation's financial system, a message aimed at reluctant lawmakers as much as a deeply skeptical public.
"Our entire economy is in danger," Bush said in an address from the White House, emphasizing that the massive bailout was not targeted at "any individual company or industry. It is aimed at preserving America's overall economy."
Warning that "America could slip into a financial panic," Bush blamed the crisis on "easy credit" in the housing market and "the faulty assumption that home values would continue to rise." As mortgage loans went bad and borrowers defaulted, he said, investors have succumbed to a "widespread loss of confidence" that threatens to shut down consumer lending, decimate the stock market, cause businesses and banks to fail -- and cost millions of Americans their jobs.
"Ultimately, our country could experience a long and painful recession," Bush said. "Fellow citizens, we must not let this happen."
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Philadelphia Daily News, Sept. 23, 2008
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September 23, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in the
Philadelphia Daily News:
You may be left holding the bagBy WILL BUNCH
It's the biggest government bailout package ever, some $700 billion to keep Wall Street and the American financial system afloat after a poorly regulated credit binge and a still-bursting housing bubble. Yet some four days after the massive federal intervention was proposed, only three things seem cast in stone.
1) Everybody hates it.
2) It's going to happen anyway.
3) You're going to pay for it, or at least certainly your children and their children will.
Public outrage spread yesterday as details of the Wall Street bailout package - in which the government would buy up billions of dollars of so-called "toxic debt" - leaked out. It was blasted by experts on the right ("It costs taxpayers money - don't do it," conservative tax fighter Grover Norquist told Politico.com) and on the left (said former Labor Secretary Robert Reich: "The public doesn't like a blank check.")
But what does it mean for you?
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Los Angeles Times, Sept. 22, 2008
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September 22, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in the
Los Angeles Times:
These Emmy Awards are not a popularity contestBy SCOTT COLLINS
When the 1960s period piece "Mad Men" won the Emmy for outstanding drama series at Sunday's 60th annual Emmy Awards, it made history in at least two ways. It became the first basic-cable program to take top series honors. But it also added a more dubious mark: Compared with previous Emmy series winners, "Mad Men" is by far the least-watched, with an average of fewer than 1 million viewers tuning in during its first season last year. That's a fraction of the audience of even NBC's ever-ratings-challenged "30 Rock," which again took the comedy prize this year.
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Daily News, Sept. 22, 2008
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September 22, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in the New York
Daily News:
Legends make last curtain call at Yankee StadiumBy MARK FEINSAND, OREN YANIV and BILL HUTCHINSON
It began 85 years ago when Babe Ruth christened Yankee Stadium with a home run to right field. It ended Sunday night as it should have, with wild applause for the greatest Yankees - past and present - who brought 26 World Championships to the historic baseball cathedral.
The grand finale had the feel of a World Series game with red, white and blue bunting hanging from the decks and was capped with a storybook 7-3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
In a ceremony packed with cheers and tears and enough nostalgia to fill both the House That Ruth Built and the new ballpark across E. 161st St., fans screamed before the last game began as living legends Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford and Reggie Jackson, among other heroes, walked out onto the field for the final time.
"I hate to see it go. It will always be in my heart," said the 83-year-old Berra, decked out in vintage Yankee pinstripes. The greatest living Yankee, with 10 World Series rings, received a massive ovation.
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The Times, Sept. 22, 2008
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September 22, 2008: An excerpt from a story in the Johannesburg, South Africa newspaper,
The Times:
Mbeki: 'Thank you and goodbye'By Staff Reporters
Ousted President Thabo Mbeki yesterday denied that he interfered with the National Prosecuting Authority's decision to charge ANC leader Jacob Zuma, and he described as "gratuitous" claims that he abused his office.
Announcing his resignation as president last night, Mbeki defended his legacy, which suffered a major blow when a Pietermaritzburg High Court judge ruled that he and his cabinet had interfered with the work of the independent prosecuting authority.
"We have never done this and therefore never compromised the right of the NPA to decide whom it wished to prosecute or not to prosecute. This applies equally to the painful matter relating to the court proceedings against the president of the ANC, comrade Jacob Zuma," Mbeki said.
The ANC decided to "recall" Mbeki at its national executive meeting this weekend following a damning judgment by Judge Chris Nicholson a week ago suggesting that his government was involved in a political conspiracy against Zuma.
(See also: "On-the-Ground Resources for Covering South Africa." By Bill Mitchell, Poynter Online, Sept. 22, 2008.) _________________________________________
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DAG, Sept. 19, 2008
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September 19, 2008: Business news from the Amsterdam, Netherlands newspaper,
DAG. Here is an excerpt from a
BBC News story:
Shares surge on US bail-out plan ....News of a US bail-out emerged after a meeting with Congress members late on Thursday, when US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced plans to introduce new laws to buy hundreds of billions of dollars of bad debt from banks.
This, he said, was at the heart of the almost unprecedented malfunction of the banking system, which has caused havoc in world stock markets this week.
"We talked about a comprehensive approach that will require legislation to deal with illiquid assets on financial institutions' balance sheets," he said.
Mr Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke are expected to thrash out the details of the plan over the weekend.
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Financial Times Deutschland,
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September 18, 2008: Page One from the Hamburg, Germany newspaper,
Financial Times Deutschland. Here is a story excerpt from a
Financial Times Web site:
Central banks act to calm markets By RALPH ATKINS and NORMA COHEN
The world's main central banks on Thursday unveiled an emergency $180bn injection of dollar liquidity in the latest attempt to halt the escalating global financial market crisis.
The US Federal Reserve announced it was making available the extra funding to overnight and longer-term money markets. In a joint statement, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, the Bank of Canada and Swiss National Bank pledged they would "continue to work closely together and will take appropriate steps to address the ongoing pressures."
Their action followed the dramatic escalation of financial market tensions following the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the rescue of the AIG insurer and the continuing crisis on Wall Street. By Wednesday, lending between banks in Europe and in the US had in effect halted.
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New York Post, Sept. 16, 2008
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September 16, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in the
New York Post:
THE NEW YORK SHOCK EXCHANGESTOCKS PLUMMET 504 PTS. AMID LEHMAN CRISIS
By ERIC LENKOWITZ
The epic collapse of Wall Street titan Lehman Brothers, combined with the virtual demise of Merrill Lynch and fears for the world's largest insurance company, sent stocks into a frenzied freefall yesterday as Wall Street grappled with financial chaos not seen since the Great Depression.
The benchmark Dow Jones industrial average plummeted 504 points by the market close - a loss of nearly 4.5 percent - to 10,917.51, the sixth-largest drop in history and the worst since the terrorist attacks of 9/11.
A stunning $700 billion in investor wealth was erased - a direct hit on retirement plans, government pension funds and other investment portfolios.
The Standard & Poors 500, a broader stock market indicator, fell 59 points - or 4.71 percent - to 1,192.
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The Wall Street Journal, Sept. 15, 2008
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September 15, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in
The Wall Street Journal:
Crisis on Wall Street as Lehman Totters, Merrill Is Sold, AIG Seeks to Raise CashBy CARRICK MOLLENKAMP, SUSANNE CRAIG, SERENA NG and AARON LUCCHETTI
NEW YORK -- The American financial system was shaken to its core on Sunday. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection, and Merrill Lynch & Co. agreed to be sold to Bank of America Corp.
The U.S. government, which bailed out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac a week ago and orchestrated the sale of Bear Stearns Cos. to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. in March, played much tougher with Lehman. It refused to provide a financial backstop to potential buyers. Without such support, Barclays PLC and Bank of America, the two most interested buyers, walked away. Barclays said Monday it pulled out of the potential deal after deciding it wasn't in the best interest of shareholders.
Early Monday morning, Lehman filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code with the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. Lehman said none of the broker-dealer subsidiaries or other subsidiaries of LBHI will be included in the Chapter 11 filing and all of the broker-dealers will continue to operate. Customers of Lehman Brothers, including customers of its wholly owned subsidiary, Neuberger Berman Holdings LLC, may continue to trade or take other actions with respect to their accounts, Lehman said.
On Sunday night, Bank of America struck an all-stock deal to buy Merrill Lynch for $29 a share, or $50 billion.
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Houston Chronicle, Sept. 14, 2008
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September 14, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in the
Houston Chronicle:
A night of heroes, but hell for some who stayedBy LINDSAY WISE
After Hurricane Ike plunged Galveston into darkness Friday night, the residents of a small retirement community on 61st Street used flashlights to signal to each other across their small courtyard.
Ed Raymond started to worry when he didn't see an answering blink from his neighbor, Margaret Winters, 79. She uses a wheelchair and lives alone with her cat in a first-floor apartment.
By the time the waters started to rise, it was too late for Galveston emergency personnel to reach her. So Raymond, 66, marshaled forces with the handful of others who rode out the storm and mounted their own rescue.
"I told 'em they were going to have so many stars in their crowns, they wouldn't be able to hold up their heads," said a relieved Winters Saturday afternoon after escaping the flood that destroyed her home and most of her belongings.
All those who decided to stay on the Island come hell or high water found themselves doing just that as Hurricane Ike unleashed its wrath, relying on their own ingenuity and the kindness and bravery of others as a powerful storm surge flooded streets and homes.
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Daily News, Sept. 12, 2008
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September 12, 2008: An excerpt from a
story in the New York
Daily News:
McCain, Obama call truce on Sept. 11 Ground Zero visit By MICHAEL SAUL and CORKY SIEMASZKO
Barack Obama and John McCain declared a brief truce in their fierce presidential battle Thursday and descended together into the crucible of America's pain to honor the Sept. 11 attack victims.
In an extraordinary show of unity 54 days from the election, Obama and McCain shook hands and then walked down a long ramp into the depths of Ground Zero.
Mayor Bloomberg and McCain's wife, Cindy, followed the candidates, whose smiles gave way to more somber expressions the deeper they went. Obama's wife, Michelle, was home in Chicago with their daughters.
The candidates were greeted at the bottom of the ramp by relatives of 9/11 victims. They gave Obama, the Democrat, a pink rose. They gave McCain, the Republican, a yellow rose.
Obama and McCain carried them to the reflecting pool, which was choked with hundreds of roses placed there earlier by the relatives of the 2,751 who died seven years ago.